The books Southern indie booksellers are recommending to readers everywhere!

Adult Fiction

Rental House by Weike Wang

Rental House is the story of a marriage and all its complicated layers, told through two family vacations. What I love most about Weike Wang is how directly she tells a story, while also leaving the reader time to think and meditate on the story and this relationship. Another brilliant, poignant story perfect for book clubs!

Rental House by Weike Wang, (List Price: $28, Riverhead Books, 9780593545546, December 2024)

Reviewed by Beth Seufer Buss, Bookmarks in Winston-Salem, North Carolina

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Roland Rogers Isn’t Dead Yet by Samantha Allen

Hollywood It Man Roland Rogers is ready to tell his big secret with no time to spare. He isn’t quite dead yet – but it’s not looking good. With the minimal power he can get from his home intercom system, he hires struggling writer Adam to bring new meaning to the term “ghostwriter” and get his memoir out before he is gone completely. As they rush to get it all done in a month, sparks fly, and Walls come down. This is very different from Allen’s first novel (which I also love), but it’s just as good. Fair warning – THIS IS NOT A ROMANCE.

Roland Rogers Isn’t Dead Yet by Samantha Allen, (List Price: $18, Zando, 9781638931539, December 2024)

Reviewed by Andrea Richardson, Fountain Bookstore in Richmond, Virginia

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The Mistletoe Mystery by Nita Prose

The Mistletoe Mystery is a sweet novella about Molly the maid, filled with lots of her Gran’s wonderful sayings. There are lots of Christmas festivities as Molly and Juan celebrate the days before Christmas. Molly is the only one who sees a mystery as you, the reader, will understand right away what is happening. But, then Molly never sees anything beyond what is right in front of her nose.

The Mistletoe Mystery by Nita Prose, (List Price: $22, Ballantine Books, 9780593875445, October 2024)

Reviewed by Nancy McFarlane, Fiction Addiction in Greenville, South Carolina

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Everyone This Christmas Has a Secret by Benjamin Stevenson

It’s short, it’s quirky, and absolutely a holiday treat of a read. Fewer pages doesn’t mean fewer complications or changes of missed clues. The trademark wry humor and references to classic mystery tropes still resonate and make this a playful and perfect gift to yourself or others.

Everyone This Christmas Has a Secret by Benjamin Stevenson, (List Price: $19.99, Mariner Books, 9780063412866, October 2024)

Reviewed by Jan Blodgett, Main Street Books in Davidson, North Carolina

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Make the Season Bright by Ashley Herring Blake

A Sapphic Christmas second-chance romance — what more do you need to know? Two musicians, one who left the other at the altar, are in a forced proximity situation at Christmas! The dynamic between Charlotte and Brighton is excellent, and I loved how important music was to the story. A perfect holiday book to devour in December.

Make the Season Bright by Ashley Herring Blake, (List Price: $19, Berkley, 9780593550595, October 2024)

Reviewed by Amber Brown, Quail Ridge Books in Raleigh, North Carolina

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The Most Wonderful Crime of the Year by Ally Carter

If Knives Out and Hallmark Christmas movies had a baby and Agatha Christie was the nanny, it would be this book. Seriously Maggie and Ethan are everything, and I want to spend all my holidays with them. This book is smart, witty, and uplifting. Is it possible to get Ally Carter to write an entire series with these two characters?

The Most Wonderful Crime of the Year by Ally Carter, (List Price: $24.99, Avon, 9780063276680, September 2024)

Reviewed by Michelle Whittaker, Fonts Books in Mclean, Virginia

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The Holiday Honeymoon Switch by Julia Mckay

If you’re looking for a little spicier Hallmark Christmas movie-type story, then look no further! Best friends Holly and Ivy actually aren’t fond of Christmas, thank you very much. But they find themselves planning a Christmas wedding for Holly anyway. But when Holly is jilted the night before the wedding, they decide to trade their holiday trips. Holly goes to the remote cabin Ivy has booked and Ivy takes the Hawaiian honeymoon that Holly can’t face. But they both find a little more than they were looking for.

The Holiday Honeymoon Switch by Julia Mckay, (List Price: $19, G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 9780593716281, October 2024)

Reviewed by Jennifer Jones, Bookmiser in Marietta, Georgia

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The Rest Is Memory by Lily Tuck

It’s hard to think about Holocaust literature without the words of Adorno in my head–“to write poetry after Auschwitz is barbaric”– but the discussion is too important, and the correctives too far-ranging. I physically ached while reading this book, and did, finally, cry–while reading Tuck’s acknowledgments. The care she has taken here to give voice to a young Catholic girl who would otherwise remain a number is evident both from the considerable research and the unflinching tone. The story that emerges feels piercingly, viscerally true, and alive. I won’t soon forget Czeslawa and her very real, youthful humanity, a girl in full bloom, afraid of her father, curious about boys, comforted by stories and prayer and the vastness of her imagination before it was starved to death. The insights into Poland’s history before and during the war, as well as the glimpses into the lives of various (real) notorious figures, create a haunting scaffolding for Czeslawa’s story. A heartbreaking novel whose integrity can’t be impugned.

The Rest Is Memory by Lily Tuck, (List Price: $24.99, Liveright, 9781324095729, December 2024)

Reviewed by Kristen Iskandrian, Thank You Books in Birmingham, Alabama

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The Voyage Home by Pat Barker

The next installment of Pat Barker’s Women of Troy series maintains her streak of incredibly nuanced and winning retellings of classical myth. This time, she’s telling the story of Cassandra and Clytemnestra mostly through the POV of Ritsa, an enslaved Troy survivor. As always, Barker’s writing is spectacular, and her portrayal of women of mythology is fully-faceted. A surefire hit for Madeline Miller fans!

The Voyage Home by Pat Barker, (List Price: $29, Doubleday, 9780385549110, December 2024)

Reviewed by Chelsea Bauer, Union Avenue Books in Knoxville, Tennessee

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Brightly Shining by Ingvild Rishøi

This is a winter novel for those of us who name Hans Christian Anderson’s stories among our favorite fairy tales. Ronja’s voice is perfect – poignant and descriptive but still true to a ten-year-old. I felt for her and for Melissa, her older sister, dealing with a parent whose good intentions were never going to see the family through to the happy Christmas Ronja envisioned. The moment I finished the book, I immediately flipped back to the first page to reassess the beginning in light of how it ends… and nearly got sucked back into re-reading the entire novel.

Brightly Shining by Ingvild Rishøi, (List Price: $20, Grove Press, 9780802163493, November 2024)

Reviewed by Ginger Kautz, Quail Ridge Books in Raleigh, North Carolina

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Bodega Bakes by Paola Velez

An exciting and creative cookbook filled with classic American treats. These recipes add some uniquely Caribbean flavors to quintessential desserts. I can’t wait to make the Sorrel Snickerdoodles and the OG Chocolate Chip Thick’ems.

Bodega Bakes by Paola Velez, (List Price: $35, Union Square & Co., 9781454952374, October 2024)

Reviewed by Michelle Whittaker, Fonts Books in Mclean, Virginia

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I Made It Out of Clay by Beth Kander

When you’re single and turning 40 on your younger sister’s wedding weekend, what would happen if you could take your love life into your own hands … literally? In her adult debut, I Made It Out of Clay, award-winning playwright Beth Kander dreams up a charming romantic dramedy that even hearts made out of stone — er, clay — won’t be able to resist, served with a healthy dose of pathos and a twist inspired by Jewish folklore.

I Made It Out of Clay by Beth Kander, (List Price: $30, MIRA, 9780778368120, December 2024)

Reviewed by Emily Liner, Friendly City Books in Columbus, Mississippi

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This Motherless Land by Nikki May

First, let me say that I will read anything that Nikki May writes. I enjoy her storytelling immensely. I also admire her for taking on a Mansfield Park retelling, as it is often one of Austen’s least-appreciated novels. Mansfield Park has always intrigued me, and is a novel that reveals more with each re-reading. With that said, I would call This Motherless Land more of a Mansfield Park-inspired story. It is not an exact parallel. In fact, it seems to me to be inspired by a combination of Mansfield Park and the life of Dido Elizabeth Belle. Though, it does examine many of the same themes in Mansfield Park, such as family, greed, love, retribution, and forgiveness. One does not need to have read Mansfield Park to enjoy this novel. May creates empathetic characters, an engaging plot, and just the right amount of suspense.

This Motherless Land by Nikki May, (List Price: $30, Mariner Books, 9780063084292, October 2024)

Reviewed by Krista Roach, E. Shaver Bookseller in Savannah, Georgia

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Love, Leda by Mark Hyatt

I think Love, Leda is a delightful and emotional read that is perfect for anyone interested in 20th-century gay literature, a la John Rechy or David Wojnarowicz. You can tell that Hyatt was a poet, and some parts of this book are beautifully lyrical and etch their way into your brain. Absolutely gorgeous and heartfelt.

Love, Leda by Mark Hyatt, (List Price: $16.95, Nightboat Books, 9781643622453, October 2024)

Reviewed by Tyler de Bose, McIntyre’s Books in Pittsboro, North Carolina

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Spotlight on: On the Calculation of Volume (Book I) by Solvej Balle

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Solvej Balle, photo courtesy the Fredrik Sandberg

The idea for the book came up a long time ago—in 1987 actually. And that was just the first bits of it, just the idea of a woman stuck in time repeating one day again and again. It took a long time for the idea to actually develop and all the philosophical material to kind of fall into place, because there’s a lot of questions about how this universe is working. So it took a long time and also the person had to develop, the person who ended up being Tara Selter, and also to find out when would it happen and all these little bits and pieces. So, there’s a lot of elements that prolonged the process. Also, there was a film coming out called Groundhog Day, which I didn’t see in the beginning because I thought it was too close. But when I finally saw it, I realized, ah, that’s a lot of nice research for my idea, because I realized it was so different.

― Solvej Balle, National Book Award Interview, Words Without Borders

On the Calculation of Volume (Book I)  by Solvej Balle

What booksellers are saying about On the Calculation of Volume (Book I)

  • The first book in Solvej Balle’s brilliant (and forthcoming in English) septology On the Calculation of Volume is, in a word, stunning. Following the day-to-day minutia of a woman continually reliving the 18th of November, Balle finds the beauty and torment in repetition and recursion and revision. In all honesty, nothing actually happens in this book. But that doesn’t matter. Balle’s writing turns the reader into a balloon hitting a powerline—bright, weightless, fluorescent, until the shock comes. An absolutely stunning piece of fiction.
      ― Charlie Marks, Fountain Bookstore in Richmond, Virginia | BUY

  • I’m hooked on this Scandinavian saga that takes a time loop plot and engages with it in a hyper-realistic style. Tara finds the most logical ways to test the boundaries of her new world and ruminates on repetitions and endings in a fresh way that no comparable story has. It’s hard to overstate how precious time is as a resource, and this is made salient as time goes rogue.
      ― Michael Allen, Carmichael’s Bookstore in Louisville, Kentucky | BUY

  • Though the stuck-in-the-eternally-repeating-day scenario hasn’t (yet) been run into the ground, it has fared well-to-fair within a fair share of well thought out, hacky, and well-out hacked renditions. And the one stipulation they communally serve up is [dun dun duhhn] Rules. OtCoV, as a member of the Well Thought Out camp, includes the unique discombobulation of Evolving Rules, as some remnants of our protagonist’s previous November 18 sneak surreptitiously or outright grace her bedside presence come current November 18. Isolation and a lack of consistent input makes the learning mind a veritable playground and we’re sitting playground-benchside feeding the pigeons. This is the first year and volume of a novella septology which’ll leave you feeling concurrently satiated and craving more.
      ― Ian McCord, Avid Bookshop in Athens, Georgia | BUY

About Solvej Balle

Solvej Balle was born in 1962, made her debut in 1986 with Lyrefugl, and she went on to write one of the 1990s’ most acclaimed works of Danish literature, According to the Law: Four Accounts of Mankind (praised by Publishers Weekly for its blend of “sly humor, bleak vision, and terrified sense of the absurd with a tacit intuition that the world has a meaning not yet fathomed”). Since then, she’s published a book on art theory, Det umuliges kunst, 2005, a political memoir Frydendal og andre gidsler, 2008, and two books of short prose Hvis and , published simultaneously in 2013. On the Calculation of Volume is Solvej Balle’s major comeback, not just to Danish or Nordic fiction, but—expanding the possibilities of the novel—to all of world literature.

Barbara J. Haveland (born 1951) is a Scottish literary translator, resident in Copenhagen. She translates fiction, poetry and drama from Danish and Norwegian to English. She has translated works by many leading Danish and Norwegian writers, both classic and contemporary, including Henrik Ibsen, Peter Høeg, Linn Ullmann and Carl Frode Tiller.

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